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Banking
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Banking sits at the center of modern economic life, making it a recurring subject across business, finance, law, and even education courses. Students write about it to understand how financial institutions manage money, extend credit, serve customers, and absorb risk. The topic carries academic weight because banking systems connect individual transactions to national and global economies, meaning decisions made by institutions and regulators ripple outward in ways that touch nearly every sector. The subject also raises questions about ethics, regulation, and access to financial services, particularly in developing countries where profitable and sustainable banking models are harder to establish.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Comparative analyses set institutions like the US Federal Reserve alongside the European Central Bank to examine policy differences. Case-study work looks at specific companies such as Capital One or applies frameworks like credit risk management to real institutions like Wells Fargo. Other papers take a historical angle, tracing banking's roots through periods such as the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Technology and digital transformation appear frequently, with multiple papers examining e-banking and electronic commerce. Some essays address ethics directly, evaluating business codes of conduct, while others explore banking in the context of international development law and finance law.

A strong essay on banking begins with a clearly scoped thesis — arguing a specific claim about risk, regulation, technology, or institutional behavior rather than simply describing how banks work. Evidence drawn from financial data, regulatory frameworks, and real company cases tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating banking as a monolithic industry; effective essays distinguish between retail banking, central banking, and investment or development banking, and they stay consistent about which context they are analyzing throughout.

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Paper Doctorate
An investigation of the lithographic printing industry in Nigeria
This study's aim was to investigate and explore the future of the lithographic printing industry and identify new approaches sustaining the Nigerian lithographic printing industry. This aim was supported by several objectives that were achieved through a series of chapters devoted to specific issues of interest, including the past, present and the future of the lithographic industry; major constraints affecting the lithographic printing industry and the effect of the Quality Management System on the lithographic industry. The study concludes with salient recommendations for the Nigerian lithographic printing industry.
Paper Doctorate
Campesino Movement, Food Sovereignty, and Sustainable Agriculture
Do we ever wonder where our food comes from? Do we ever wonder just what it takes to ensure that ripe strawberries are available during most of the year, or how we have lemons and limes in the bitter cold months? In fact, the entire process of the food regime is tied up with capitalism, globalism, and international relations. It is not necessarily about the food produced, but the internal and external labor and distribution issues surrounding food. Many, in fact, argue that the world's food crisis is a result of an overdependence on fossil fuels, inflation and financial speculation, the concentration of agribusiness, and the supply and demand curve which often seems to require continual exploitation of indigenous populations. In fact, food may be thought of as more of a political "regime of global value relations"
Research Paper Doctorate
Strategic Plan for Louisville Community Development Bank
Strategic Plan & Analysis of New Commercial Endeavor
Paper Undergraduate
American Express: History, Global Strategy & Growth
The first surprise in this company's history is that they did not start out in 1850 as a financial company, but rather as a "pony express" type business that delivered all the packages, parcels, gold, etc.
Paper Undergraduate
Business concepts and applications
In order to determine the degree to which business schools have failed the nation in the way that they train their students, we must examine the antecedents of the recent economic meltdown, the ways in which business…
Paper Masters
Reforms in accounting practices and policy
Over the last three years, the credit crunch and severe recession have had a profound impact upon the world of business. What happened was when the recession first began in 2007 many: banks, brokerage firms and…
Paper Undergraduate
Crisis as an inevitable feature of capitalism
Today's economic and financial crisis began in the rich world particularly in the USA. It has been referred to as a financial meltdown, storm or credit crunch. Credit crunch is an economic condition in which investment capital is hard to get. It means that there is hardly any credit available for investors.
Research Paper Doctorate
Security on the Web
Security on the Web -- What are the Key Issues for Major Banks?
Paper Doctorate
Void vs. Voidable Contracts: Key Legal Differences
There is a fundamental difference between a void contract and a voidable contract. A void contract is a contract that has been declared void by a court. The law must declare a contract void for it to be so (Ebersole,…
Paper Undergraduate
Hedge Funds Suitable for Retail
Hedging is profitable in trading with bigger lots and the retailer is not the entity expected to trade with big lots. That being one of the considerations of profitability in the type of investment, authors are at loss to explain what exactly is hedging. In simple terms some commodity or stock is purchased at a future determined price as against the current price depending on perception of future rise or fall in the price of the lot. The definition of a hedge fund is vague. The hedge funds can be analyzed in terms of the legal operation methods followed, and also based on the principles of hedging and strategies they pursue. ‘Hedge fund' was a term used in 1949 to describe a business that Alfred Winslow Jones created. The business operation consisted mainly of reducing future risk by buying currently undervalued stocks and ‘simultaneously short selling' overvalued stocks, and because of the possible future differences of the prices of either equity the profit could be made.